scholarly journals Numerical study of a case of the free discharge of water through the turbine with a braked runner

2021 ◽  
Vol 2119 (1) ◽  
pp. 012152
Author(s):  
D V Platonov ◽  
A V Minakov ◽  
A V Sentyabov

Abstract The paper presents a numerical study of the free discharge of water through the turbine with a braked runner. The simulation was carried out for a unit of a full-scale Francis turbine. The finite volume method was employed for unstructured meshes using the DES method. The simulation results show the flow structures, integral characteristics, and pressure pulsations in the flow path. The analysis of the applicability of this approach to real conditions is carried out.

2005 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 398-405 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shewaferaw S. Shibeshi ◽  
William E. Collins

AbstractBlood flow rheology is a complex phenomenon. Presently there is no universally agreed upon model to represent the viscous property of blood. However, under the general classification of non-Newtonian models that simulate blood behavior to different degrees of accuracy, there are many variants. The power law, Casson and Carreau models are popular non-Newtonian models and affect hemodynamics quantities under many conditions. In this study, the finite volume method is used to investigate hemodynamics predictions of each of the models. To implement the finite volume method, the computational fluid dynamics software Fluent 6.1 is used. In this numerical study the different hemorheological models are found to predict different results of hemodynamics variables which are known to impact the genesis of atherosclerosis and formation of thrombosis. The axial velocity magnitude percentage difference of up to 2 % and radial velocity difference up to 90 % is found at different sections of the T-junction geometry. The size of flow recirculation zones and their associated separation and reattachment point’s locations differ for each model. The wall shear stress also experiences up to 12 % shift in the main tube. A velocity magnitude distribution of the grid cells shows that the Newtonian model is close dynamically to the Casson model while the power law model resembles the Carreau model.


2011 ◽  
Vol 677 ◽  
pp. 272-304 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. AFONSO ◽  
P. J. OLIVEIRA ◽  
F. T. PINHO ◽  
M. A. ALVES

High-elasticity simulations of flows through a two-dimensional (2D) 4 : 1 abrupt contraction and a 4 : 1 three-dimensional square–square abrupt contraction were performed with a finite-volume method implementing the log-conformation formulation, proposed by Fattal & Kupferman (J. Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech., vol. 123, 2004, p. 281) to alleviate the high-Weissenberg-number problem. For the 2D simulations of Boger fluids, modelled by the Oldroyd-B constitutive equation, local flow unsteadiness appears at a relatively low Deborah number (De) of 2.5. Predictions at higher De were possible only with the log-conformation technique and showed that the periodic unsteadiness grows with De leading to an asymmetric flow with alternate back-shedding of vorticity from pulsating upstream recirculating eddies. This is accompanied by a frequency doubling mechanism deteriorating to a chaotic regime at high De. The log-conformation technique provides solutions of accuracy similar to the thoroughly tested standard finite-volume method under steady flow conditions and the onset of a time-dependent solution occurred approximately at the same Deborah number for both formulations. Nevertheless, for Deborah numbers higher than the critical Deborah number, and for which the standard iterative technique diverges, the log-conformation technique continues to provide stable solutions up to quite (impressively) high Deborah numbers, demonstrating its advantages relative to the standard methodology. For the 3D contraction, calculations were restricted to steady flows of Oldroyd-B and Phan-Thien–Tanner (PTT) fluids and very high De were attained (De ≈ 20 for PTT with ϵ = 0.02 and De ≈ 10000 for PTT with ϵ = 0.25), with prediction of strong vortex enhancement. For the Boger fluid calculations, there was inversion of the secondary flow at high De, as observed experimentally by Sousa et al. (J. Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech., vol. 160, 2009, p. 122).


2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Hua ◽  
Shengkai Yu ◽  
Weidong Zhou ◽  
Kyaw Sett Myo

An unstructured triangular mesh is successfully applied to the static simulations of air bearing sliders due to its flexibility, accuracy and mesh efficiency in capturing various complex rails and recess wall regions of air bearing surface, as well as fast simulation speed. This paper introduces a new implicit algorithm with second order time accuracy for the time-dependent simulations of the slider dynamics and available for the unstructured triangular mesh. The new algorithm is specially developed for the finite volume method. Since the algorithm has second order time accuracy, it provides the flexibility of applying various time steps while guaranteeing the numerical accuracy and convergence. Moreover, the unstructured triangular mesh is highly efficient and fewer nodes are used. Finally, due to the small variation of flying attitude between two neighboring time steps, it is especially efficient for iteration methods which are used in the finite volume method. As a result, the algorithm shows very fast speed in time-dependent dynamic simulations. Simulation studies are conducted on the flying dynamics of a thermal flying-height control slider after external excitations. The simulation results are compared with the simulation results obtained by the rectangular mesh based on the finite element method. It is observed that the simulation results are well correlated. The fast Fourier transform is also employed to analyze the air bearing frequencies. It is indicated that the new algorithm is of high efficiency and importance for time-dependent dynamic simulations.


Author(s):  
Zhenhua Wang ◽  
Bengt Sunden ◽  
Shikui Dong ◽  
Zhihong He ◽  
Weihua Yang ◽  
...  

In designing industrial cylindrical furnaces, it is important to predict the radiative heat flux on the wall with high accuracy. In this study, we consider CO2 and H2O which have strong absorption in the infrared range. The absorption coefficients of the gases are calculated by using the statistical narrow band (SNB) model. The spectrum is divided into 15 bands to cover all the absorption regions of the two non-gray gases. The radiative transfer equation is solved by the finite volume method (FVM) in cylindrical coordinates. To make the FVM more accurate, we discretize the solid angle into 80 directions with the S8 approximation which is found to be both efficient and less time consuming. Based on the existing species and temperature fields, which were modeled by the FLUENT commercial code, the radiative heat transfer in a cylinder combustor is simulated by an in-house code. The results show that the radiative heat flux plays a dominant part of the heat flux to the wall. Meanwhile, when the gas is considered as nongray, the computational time is very huge. Therefore, a parallel algorithm is also applied to speed up the computing process.


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